Garissa Floods

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on the outskirts of Garissa

 

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flooded Garissa downtown

AOB: Garissa Water Supply (following pictures)

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intake on Friday morning

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intake on Saturday – pls note the increase in water levels by about 1m.

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Garissa Water Supply – water supply treatment plant

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Just to give you a small idea what this is all about: stand on the bridge to Garissa (where we did the river gaugings), look down at the water, wait there for ~30 seconds and you’ll have an idea of the amount of water which is consumed by the ++66.000 people in Garissa city area (= 30 seconds of discharge on Tana River are a lot during high floods).

Posted in EAKenya, maji | 4 Comments

Garissa!

Has anyone ever blogged from Garissa? Yes? No?
Could be, actually, as I’ve seen a very nice office here in Garissa where the dudes had a well working DSL connection. And I’ve never seen a place SO full of 4WD cars with short wave antennas – most of them of course donated by foreign governments and / or churches. This place sure is interesting – it’s my first day here until the end of this week, and I somehow like it.

Now for those who don’t know what & where Garissa is: it’s a town city in North Eastern Province in Kenya with a population of about 66.000, located on Tana River. Which is why we‘ve come here…

On the way to Garissa, we’ve passed this blocked flood bridge, where the floods actually looked for another way OVER the street….

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..and had their share of the tarmac.

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Upon arrival in Garissa, we went to the local office and found this automatic rain gauging station that had been installed by the Japanese (JICA) in 1989 – and never been serviced since then. Now that’s what I call wrong development aid. We removed it, took it with us for repairs and gave our Garissa jamaa a manual, very jua kali-made rain gauge instead. Which works and doesn’t require much service.

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We’re here in Garissa to asses the renovation costs of our local branch, and do some river gaugings on Tana river.

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Now that’s nothing else but taking a propeller-styled device, lowering it into the river from a bridge and measuring its revolutions within a certain amount of time which then translates into the discharge of the river at this specific point.

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And although there’s nothing much you can actually see, such experiments of course attract lots of people who all look down from the bridge, trying to see what these people are doing.

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In the end of the day we continued working until the rains really intensified and I ended up being completely soaked to the bones!

Doing such work also gives you the chance to see such wonderful colours:

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That thing down right is the water intake for Garissa’s water supply!

Posted in EAKenya, mazingira | 14 Comments

one of those days…

…where I really miss my two darlings, singing along to Evan Dando, Maximillian Hecker, Dover, Dinosaur Jr., Mazzy Star, Nada Surf, Eskobar, Alice in Chains, Billy Talent, Brendan Benson, Death Cab for Cutie, Jack Johnson, My Vitriol, Ride, JAMC, Keane, Kings of Convenience, LOGH, Minor Majority, Placebo, JJ72, Starsailor, The Magic Numbers, The Shins, The Sundays, Thirteen Senses, Travis, Coldplay, Danko Jones….and…the Libertines.

…where I just feel like listening to Six Feet Under “Lycanthropy” instead.

…where I pack my stuff for just another journey.

…where I haven’t seen one of those gangsta roaches for days.

…where I think about mbuzimoja from the slopes of Kikwaru in Nbo, and how great it would be if she could just come along.
…where I fall asleep with the assuredness that “Life is a journey, not a guided tour”, as Ken says.

…where I hope to be finding the truth somewhere out there in the desert in the days to come.

Heri kufa macho kuliko kufa moyo. – It is better to lose your eyes than to lose your heart.

Posted in mapenzi, ngoma | 1 Comment

the voltage

…so I was chilling in my humble room and wondered why the lights are so dark. I rubbed my eyes and decided to pull out the digital multimeter:

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Know what? Others don’t have any electricity at all! So this is just ok.

Somehow.

(it “is supposed to” show a voltage of about ~ 226V…)

Posted in maisha | 3 Comments

crown caps

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…sometimes I think an “ingenuity award” should be given to those smart ppl around the globe who have started using crown caps as washers for their various constructions. There are a lot of things one can make out of these crown caps. Ear rings, washers, knifes (?), notebook hinges :-)…anything else?

I’ll take this occasion to introduce a new category to my blog (although, yeah, categories are sooo Web 1.0 as (technorati) keywords seem to be the “in-thing” since about a year now, but wth…): imagineering.

A term introduced (to me, that is) by these guys from Denmark who have blessed the world with the Life Straw (what happened to it anyways?) and who are responsible for those PermaNet mosquito nets which are for sale in Kenya and elsewhere for something around EUR 8,-. Imagineering has its origin somewhere else though… and the crown caps used as washers are a typical example of imagineering. U know, not everyone grows up with LEGO or FisherPrice toys – and still there are a lot of ppl out there who have become quite technical (despite any missing technical machinery during their childhood) and they instantly see how things can be fixed with jua kali methods. After all, it works and it’s a great way to re-use crown caps.

Creativity is one of the sexiest things in the world.

Posted in imagineering, technology | Comments Off